Tackling the Disability Support Workforce Challenge: Recruitment, Retention & Training in 2025
In 2025, the disability support sector faces a major workforce challenge. This article explores practical strategies for recruiting the right people, keeping great staff engaged, and building skills through ongoing training helping providers create strong, stable teams that can deliver outstanding participant outcomes.

Disclaimer Notice:
The information in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or professional advice. Please seek independent legal counsel to understand your specific obligations. Learn more.
If you are running an NDIS or disability support service in 2025, you know the workforce challenge is real. The sector is growing, participant needs are evolving, and expectations on providers have never been higher. At the same time, finding and keeping skilled, passionate workers is becoming harder.
We have pulled together the three biggest areas to focus on, recruitment, retention, and training. Along with practical steps providers can take to build strong, stable teams.
1. Recruitment: Finding the Right People
The demand for disability support workers continues to rise, and competition for skilled staff is fierce. In 2025, successful recruitment means looking beyond the traditional job ad.
What’s working now:
- Wider reach: Using sector-specific job boards, community networks, and social media to connect with people who align with your values.
- Employer branding: Showcasing your culture, values, and team stories so candidates see why they would want to work with you.
- Streamlined onboarding: Reducing the time between application, interview, and first shift makes a huge difference in keeping candidates engaged.
Tip: Highlight flexibility, professional development, and support for work-life balance. These are now key decision factors for job seekers.
2. Retention: Keeping Great Staff
It’s one thing to recruit well, but keeping great staff is where the real challenge lies. Burnout, heavy workloads, and limited career progression are all risks in our sector.
What’s working now:
- Workload balance: Using smart rostering tools to fairly distribute shifts and reduce fatigue.
- Recognition: Simple, regular acknowledgement of good work has a big impact on morale.
- Career pathways: Offering opportunities for workers to step into specialist or leadership roles keeps them motivated to stay.
Tip: Retention starts on day one. A supportive, well-organised onboarding experience sets the tone for a lasting working relationship.
3. Training: Building Skills for Today and Tomorrow
With the sector changing fast, from new assistive technologies to updated compliance requirements, training is no longer a “nice to have,” it is essential.
What’s working now:
- Continuous learning: Offering small, regular learning opportunities instead of only yearly training days.
- Practical skills: Training on cultural safety, trauma-informed care, and communication is just as important as technical skills.
- Tech readiness: Ensuring workers can confidently use the digital tools your organisation relies on for rostering, shift notes, and compliance.
Tip: Link training to career progression so staff can see the benefits for their future.
The Bottom Line
In 2025, the providers who win the workforce challenge will be the ones who treat their people as their most valuable asset. Strong recruitment strategies, a focus on retention, and a culture of continuous training will help build a stable, skilled, and motivated team.
At Diversity Sync’d, we help providers streamline rostering, track training, and keep everything organised so you can focus on supporting both your participants and your workforce.